2 resultados para Londres (GB) -- Kensington Palace

em Boston University Digital Common


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By utilizing structure sharing among its parse trees, a GB parser can increase its efficiency dramatically. Using a GB parser which has as its phrase structure recovery component an implementation of Tomita's algorithm (as described in [Tom86]), we investigate how a GB parser can preserve the structure sharing output by Tomita's algorithm. In this report, we discuss the implications of using Tomita's algorithm in GB parsing, and we give some details of the structuresharing parser currently under construction. We also discuss a method of parallelizing a GB parser, and relate it to the existing literature on parallel GB parsing. Our approach to preserving sharing within a shared-packed forest is applicable not only to GB parsing, but anytime we want to preserve structure sharing in a parse forest in the presence of features.

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We describe a GB parser implemented along the lines of those written by Fong [4] and Dorr [2]. The phrase structure recovery component is an implementation of Tomita's generalized LR parsing algorithm (described in [10]), with recursive control flow (similar to Fong's implementation). The major principles implemented are government, binding, bounding, trace theory, case theory, θ-theory, and barriers. The particular version of GB theory we use is that described by Haegeman [5]. The parser is minimal in the sense that it implements the major principles needed in a GB parser, and has fairly good coverage of linguistically interesting portions of the English language.